DHS adds foraging to tech arsenal

For DHS, the rest of the government is just one big attic full of useful stuff.

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If the Department of Homeland Security doesn't have a particular technology needed to solve a problem, it has the option of going into "McGyver" mode, adapting what it can find to make a suitable solution instead of turning to the formal federal procurement process.

The agency scours tech ideas and adaptable gear from other agencies, research groups or private industry, or a combination of all those sources. Such "technology foraging," became a cornerstone of the DHS Science and Technology Directorate's mission in 2011. In an S&T Snapshot post on its website, Stephen Hancock, a former Navy aerospace engineering duty officer who leads the S&T tech foraging initiative, wrote that research managers canvas journals, patents, labs and forums across the Internet looking for technologies that could be "readily adaptable" to the agency's mission.

"When people think 'innovator,' they think 'Thomas Edison'—a lab genius who created science breakthroughs," Hancock wrote. "But today we need innovators who can recognize a breakthrough, adapt it, package it, and then field it. It is the reinventing of invention itself. After all, we're not the only ones facing the same kind of challenges."

DHS finds adaptable technologies in a wide variety of places. One example, according to the snapshot document, involved a collaboration between the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The Coast Guard needed a way to track small watercraft that might be used to transport illegal contraband. S&T developed software with NOAA that allows the Coast Guard to take its own radar images of a bay, then tap into NOAA’s coastal radar—normally used to monitor ocean currents and wave action--to detect stealthy small vessels that might be hauling contraband.

The article also mentions a collaboration with NASA on disaster-victim detection technology, in which S&T modified a NASA-developed human heartbeat detection monitor for use in search-and-rescue operations.

"These successful examples of tech foraging show how multiple investments from federal agencies can be leveraged, especially when program managers actively look for opportunities to re-purpose research and development, reducing costs and creating new homeland security solutions," said Hancock, quoted in the DHS document.

Although DHS spokeswoman Nicole Stickel declined to comment on the specifics of how the program might get technology to DHS users more quickly or cost-effectively, she did say that the program "leverages existing research to save time and money while jumpstarting a technology's application for homeland security."